New Zealand Journal of Botany abstract
B97002
Received 6 January 1997; accepted 2 May 1997
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1997, Vol. 35: 545-553
0028-825X/97/3504-0545 $7.00 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand 1997
A macrofossil flora from early Aranuian lake-bed deposits, Doubtful River,
Waiau-uha catchment, North Canterbury, New Zealand
C. J. BURROWS
Department of Plant and Microbial Sciences
University of Canterbury
Private Bag 4800
Christchurch, New Zealand
Abstract Sediments deposited in an early Aranuian lake in a
mountain valley contain abundant, well-preserved fossil wood, leaves, and
seeds. Radiocarbon dates ranging from 13 300 to 10 800 yr B.P. have
been obtained for wood samples. The macrofossil species represented all grow in
the region today. By analogy with modern plant communities, the fossil
assemblage appears to be drawn from two main kinds of vegetation complex:
hillside scrub, with
Phyllocladus alpinus a major component; and
valley-floor communities, including river floodplain, with
Racomitrium
lanuginosum abundant and associated grassland with dwarf shrubs
(
Leucopogon fraseri) and thorn scrub (
Discaria toumatou). The
scarcity of
Podocarpus hallii fossils suggests that the climate was
cooler than now.
Archeria traversii fossils indicate that precipitation
was at least as high as now.
Keywords early-Aranuian; lake bottomset beds; foreset beds;
radiocarbon dates; plant fossils; environmental interpretation
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